As sexual misconduct allegations continue to pile up against Harvey Weinstein, several other powerful men have faced allegations of their own, including director James Toback and Hollywood agent Tyler Grasham. Another man currently facing a public firestorm has dealt with this before: word broke over the weekend that Bill O’Reilly settled a sixth sexual harassment claim just one month before Fox News renewed his contract last year. Naturally, late-night hosts wasted no time calling hypocrisy. After all, given how furiously Fox’s correspondents have been tearing into Weinstein and Hollywood, their friendly treatment of O’Reilly seems . . . puzzling.

“It’s shocking that Fox News knew about all these sexual-harassment settlements and kept him employed for so long,” Stephen Colbert said on Monday’s Late Show. “But maybe they were just trying to protect their female employees. Because if Bill’s on camera, that’s one hour a day they knew he’s not groping somebody.”

In a statement to the Times, Fox said it considered O’Reilly’s settlement with former legal analyst Lis Wiehl to be “a personal issue between the two of them.” Colbert agreed, noting, “Whoever O’Reilly harasses and then pays off in his personal time is his own business. It’s a matter between one consenting adult,” he said, before pointedly trailing off.

For his part, O’Reilly has denied the allegations. Fox told the Times that when it renewed O’Reilly’s contract in February, the deal included provisions that would allow the host to be dismissed in the face of new allegations. “It’s like the old saying goes,” Colbert said. “Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, some more shame. Fool me three times, you’ve really got to do a better job of fooling me. Four times, we’re extending your contract. Five times, we wish best of luck to Bill in all his future endeavors; now enjoy The Tucker Carlson Show.”

On The Daily Show,Trevor Noah noted that O’Reilly paid his $32 million settlement with Wiehl out of his own pocket, quipping, “Now I understand why he cranks out so many books.” But the comedian was mostly fascinated by Fox’s seemingly incongruous responses to O’Reilly and Weinstein’s respective scandals. The network that renewed O’Reilly despite its knowledge of sexual harassment settlements has been mercilessly criticizing not only Weinstein, but also what some pundits have characterized as a Hollywood and media establishment bent on protecting the producer.

“There is no faster way to get Fox to care about something than to find out a powerful liberal person has done it,” Noah said. “Maybe we should tell them Harvey Weinstein colluded with Russia?”

In reality, Noah continued, Hollywood has already shunned Weinstein in just about every way possible. Fox News, on the other hand, invited O’Reilly back for a prime-time appearance with Sean Hannity just six months after his ouster. The network is right to call out Weinstein, Noah said, because shunning serial sexual harassers shouldn’t be a political issue. “So Fox News, please, keep going after sexual harassers,” Noah concluded. “I applaud you. And the great news is, you don’t even have to leave the building.”